Optimizing images for SEO

Once again I wouldn’t recommend going back to already created content and optimizing the images. It doesn’t create enough benefit to do that. However, if you’re creating fresh content then you should be following best practice.
Images have a couple of elements to them that should be properly optimized. The first is the image file name. Make this descriptive and unique. I’ve found getting into the habit of naming images properly has come in pretty handy when looking through my laptop or on a CMS to dig out an image to use for an article.
Images also have a written description, through the image title and alt tag. These are two HTML elements which provide written information about the image. I tend to just fill out the alt tag for an image and leave the title blank. Technically the title is there to give the image name and the alt tag is meant to describe the image. The alt tag is also important from an accessibility viewpoint. Screen readers will read the alt tag to describe the image to the user.
Make sure the image alt tag uses keywords related to the information on-page. Google also uses the content surrounding an image to try and determine its purpose. You want to make sure that this all ties together and focuses on the same topic.
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Flash and SEO

Google does not like flash. In fact not many people do. The main reason for this is the security risk that it poses. It’s easy for malicious types to use it to infect your device when it’s loaded by your browser. Many people (including myself) have flash turned off by default in their browser. HTML5 has now come along and replaced much of the functionality flash was used for. Even display ads are now phasing out flash in favour of HTML5. Signalling what may be the death knell Google Ads will not allow you to upload flash based ads from this July and will stop displaying flash ads across the network from January next year.
Suffice it to say Google is not a fan of flash. Aside from the accessibility and vulnerability problems flash pages have no URLs. So it’s hard for Google to access and understand the content. Text within flash can be indexed, but with the rise of mobile devices which do not support flash Google actively steers mobile searchers away from flash heavy sites:

Outbound links

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It's not just who links to you that's important, but where you link to. This can affect both relevance and trust. If you're linking out to on-topic sites from your content that's a good indication that the content is relevant to the terms in question.
Linking out to low quality sites from bad neighbourhoods, sends a negative signal to Google. Even no-follow links to poor quality sites are likely to damage rankings.

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Usability

Usability is becoming an increasingly significant part of SEO, with dedicated parts of the algorithm looking at things like page layouts and updates being rolled out specifically targeting this. It makes sense from Google's perspective as a poor user experience means people disliking the search experience and a potential loss of business for Google.

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Page load speed

If your page takes an age to load, it's going to create a poor experience for the user. They are likely to click back to the search results and go looking for another result. Google recognises that slow pages provide a poor user experience and therefore incorporate load times as a ranking factor.
Google mentions in its developer guidelines that a score of above 85 in its page load speed (within their Page Speed Insights tool) indicates the page is 'performing well'. It's a reasonable assumption therefore that there is a threshold to page speed you need to pass, rather than incremental gains in rankings across page speed.
The PageSpeed Score ranges from 0 to 100 points. A higher score is better and a score of 85 or above indicates that the page is performing well.
?https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/insights/about
There are a couple of different ways Google may measure page speed. One is using a network agnostic test, so ignoring any factors that may vary the load time such as connection speed or location. This is the same method as the Page Speed tool which it provides for webmasters to measure page speed. The other mechanism it has available is through looking at user data passed back from Chrome which of course is subject to all those different variations. It may load considerably quicker for a user on a high-speed 40mb connection than a slow 2mb connection.
Within this the measurement is broken down into several variations. It's a fair assumption that the different measurements given within the page speed tool are reflective of the measurement Google considers important.
Desktop loading speed : How long it takes to load the page for a desktop device
Mobile loading speed : How long it takes to load the page for a mobile device
Above the fold load time : How long it takes to load the portion of the page which is immediately visible
Full page load time : How long it takes the entire page to load

If your page takes an age to load, it's going to create a poor experience for the user. They are likely to click back to the search results and go looking for another result. Google recognises that slow pages provide a poor user experience and therefore incorporate load times as a ranking factor.
Google mentions in its developer guidelines that a score of above 85 in its page load speed (within their Page Speed Insights tool) indicates the page is 'performing well'. It's a reasonable assumption therefore that there is a threshold to page speed you need to pass, rather than incremental gains in rankings across page speed.
The PageSpeed Score ranges from 0 to 100 points. A higher score is better and a score of 85 or above indicates that the page is performing well.
?https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/insights/about
There are a couple of different ways Google may measure page speed. One is using a network agnostic test, so ignoring any factors that may vary the load time such as connection speed or location. This is the same method as the Page Speed tool which it provides for webmasters to measure page speed. The other mechanism it has available is through looking at user data passed back from Chrome which of course is subject to all those different variations. It may load considerably quicker for a user on a high-speed 40mb connection than a slow 2mb connection.
Within this the measurement is broken down into several variations. It's a fair assumption that the different measurements given within the page speed tool are reflective of the measurement Google considers important.
Desktop loading speed : How long it takes to load the page for a desktop device
Mobile loading speed : How long it takes to load the page for a mobile device
Above the fold load time : How long it takes to load the portion of the page which is immediately visible
Full page load time : How long it takes the entire page to load